Modeling and processing of scattered waves in seismic reflection surveys

Abstract
Various wave‐scattering mechanisms are known to degrade reflection signals by producing noise in seismic reflection data. Synthetic 2-D acoustic‐wave finite‐ difference data sets illustrate the effects of two such mechanisms. Twenty‐five shot gathers were generated for each of two models and the data were processed as standard CMP surveys. In one model, an irregular low‐ velocity surface layer produced multiply scattered surface waves that appear as linear noise trains in common‐shot gathers and stacked sections. The scattering of upcoming reflections at the lower interface of the layer also produced a significant amount of noise. When predictive deconvolution was applied before stack to reduce reverberations, the spectral character of the scattered surface waves seriously inhibited the action of that process. In the second model, a zone of smooth, random velocity variation was imposed between two reflectors deeper in the model. The heterogeneous zone (±5 percent rms velocity variation) substantially degraded the signal reflected from below it; events produced by body‐wave scattering are characterized by higher phase velocities than those seen in the first model. Conventional CMP stacking produced discontinuous subhorizontal events from the disturbed zone. The limited bandwidth of the propagating signal and spatial filtering attributable to CMP stacking cause these events to bear no simple relation to the velocity anomalies of the model, even after migration.

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